Osborne is wrong about green taxes
September 17, 2007
Kyoto Anniversary: What it Means Today
July 25, 2007
Letter to the Editor: EU talk no match for US action on emissions
June 12, 2007
Media, Environmentalists Pounce on New Administration Report
The “annual” report of the U. S. Climate Change Science Program for fiscal years 2004-5, entitled, “Our Changing Planet,” was released on August 25. It was immediately hailed as a turn-around in the Bush Administration’s position by the media and environmental groups.
The New York Times, in a story by Andrew Revkin on August 25, set the tone, and an editorial the next day called the report a “striking shift in the way the Bush administration has portrayed the science of climate change.” Other newspaper editorial columns and environmental groups jumped on this interpretation.
The “striking shift” is confined to several short passages in a 130-page document that are less qualified and more direct than in the FY 2003 edition. The statements that attracted the most attention are the following:
“Multiple ensemble simulations of the 20th century climate have been conducted using climate models that include new and improved estimates of natural and anthropogenic forcing. The simulations show that observed globally averaged surface air temperatures can be replicated only when both anthropogenic forcings, e.g., greenhouse gases, as well as natural forcings such as solar variability and volcanic eruptions are included in the model. These simulations improve on the robustness of earlier work (pages 46-7).
“Comparison of index trends in observations and model simulations shows that North American temperature changes from 1950 to 1999 were unlikely to be due only to natural climate variations. Observed trends over this period are consistent with simulations that include anthropogenic forcing from increasing atmospheric greenhouse gases and sulfate aerosols. However, most of the observed warming from 1900 to 1949 was likely due to natural climate variation (page 47).”
Administration officials disputed that the report represents a striking shift in their position. In a Washington Post article on Aug. 27, White House Science Adviser John Marburger, one of the signatories to the report, was quoted as saying that the findings had “no implications for policy.”
Further, a New York Times reporter covering the presidential campaign put the question directly to President Bush (Aug. 27): “Asked why the administration had changed its position on what causes global warming, Mr. Bush replied, ‘Ah, we did? I don't think so.’”
The report may be found on the web at http://www.usgcrp.gov/usgcrp/Library/ocp2004-5/default.htm.
Edwards Contradicts Kerry Campaign’s Official Kyoto Policy
In contrast to Vice President Al Gore’s 2000 presidential campaign, references to global warming have been few and far between by the Democratic ticket of Senators John Kerry and John Edwards. Within one week in August, however, the Kerry campaign published its position on the Kyoto Protocol, which vice presidential nominee John Edwards then contradicted at a campaign stop.
On August 19, the campaign issued a document aimed at
Less than a week later, on August 24, the Journal Times of
Climate Policies Raise
As several power companies in
An electricity analyst at consultants Wood Mackenzie told Reuters (Aug. 19) that, “Industrial and commercial customers have seen rises between 20 and 30 percent in quotes for their power contracts for next year, mainly due to higher oil prices and a European Union carbon emissions trading scheme starting in January.” The report went on, “The emissions trading scheme is likely to curb output at coal-fired power stations, the most polluting generators.”
The voluntary protocol, which works on a company-wide or ‘entity’ scale rather than by project or at factory level, requires companies to account for the six
Environmental groups lauded the move. WRI President Jonathan Lash said, “The GHG Protocol is voluntary, but if and when the Kyoto Protocol is ratified, and in an increasingly carbon-constrained world, mandatory caps will be imposed. Common sense tells us that businesses that adopt voluntary accounting standards now will remain ahead of the game when emission caps become mandatory.”
Judi Greenwald of the
Mexican government official Miguel Cervantes admitted that it would be a challenge to get
Authors Correct Error Found in Research Article
Tim Lambert of the
Prof. McKitrick has now corrected the calculations upon which this conclusion was based. In a draft erratum, available at http://www.uoguelph.ca/~rmckitri/research/gdptemp.html, he writes, “The principal effect of the correction is a reduced weight on the constant term and an increased weight on the COSABLAT variable itself. Indeed the correction improves the overall fit and removes the anomalously small cosine-latitude effect. The socioeconomic variables remain significant and the effects carry over from the station data to the gridded data as before.
“Because the main patterns of results persist across the revised tables, the original discussions as worded in our paper need only minor modification, and our overall conclusion, re-stated here, is unaffected:
“Overall, the results of this study support the hypothesis that published temperature data are contaminated with nonclimatic influences that add up to a net warming bias, and that efforts should be made to properly quantify these effects.”
Scientist Contributes to Alarmism
In a story based on the article, Dr. Socolow is reported as telling The Washington Post (Aug. 23), “If governments fail to act…the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will triple in 50 years. ‘Keeping it below a doubling is a heroic task,’ he said.”
The Greening Earth Society pointed out the hyperbole involved in this statement (World Climate Alert, Aug. 25):
“Before people began burning fossil fuels to release the energy that powers life as we know it, the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide was about 280 parts per million. It’s now about 375 ppm — an increase of about 34 percent. Twenty-five years ago, the concentration was around 330 ppm, or 18 percent above background. In other words, Socolow is telling Eilperin (apparently with a straight face) that the 16 percent rise in the last twenty-five years will morph into a 300 percent rise in the next fifty “if governments fail to act.” This is nonsensical! To triple the 280 ppm background by 2053, the atmosphere’s CO2 concentration must increase 1.65 percent per year.
“According to data compiled by the U. S. Energy Information Administration, the amount of carbon dioxide emissions per capita has been dropping worldwide since the 1980s and population (all those “capita”) isn’t increasing at nearly the rate predicted twenty-five years ago. In 1980, the United Nations predicted a global population of 15 billion by 2050. Their most recent estimate is nine billion. They’ve reduced their population prediction 40 percent. As companies have competed to produce and deploy more efficient technologies (principally in developed countries), the rate of increase in the atmospheric CO2 concentration has remained much smaller than the required 1.65 percent per year. In fact, it has changed very little. Over the period for which we have accurate records (1958 to present), the increase has fluctuated between 0.4% per year and 0.45%.”
Dr Than Aung of the University of the South Pacific recently confirmed the conclusions of other experts, such as Nils-Axel Morner, that low-lying Pacific island nations such as
According to the New Zealand Herald (Aug. 25), Dr Aung presented his findings at a scientific conference in
Dr Aung concluded that, “The fears of small nations like
Explaining why nations like
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